Star Chart Features

Single click on any body to get the name, designation, calculated altitude, azimuth,
and magnitude. Drag the cursor to scroll the chart. Zoom in and out with a single
click.

3D Orrery display of solar system and background stars and constellations.

Display of orbital paths for inner solar system bodies showing daily positions for
one year centered on current date.

Animation of the sky in increments of hours, days, weeks, or months.

Manual or automatic control of star magnitudes. Simple control over which objects
to display. Overall, these features give great control of visual clutter given the
limited screen real estate on the Pocket PC and Smarphone.

Chart can be rotated to any of the 16 compass points and also flipped along the
North - South axis. This allows the either overhead (East and West reversed) or
non-overhead (East and West normal) viewing.

User location set by clicking on map, city selection, GPS, or by entering Latitude
and Longitude.

Chart can be "live, realtime", or static for any user selected time.

Core positional calculation routines based on "Novas" (Naval Observatory Vector
Astrometry Subroutines Version 2.0.1). Star data is from the Bright Star Catalog
(5th Revised Edition), comprising the 9110 brightest stars using J2000 equatorial
positions and the International Celestial Reference Frame (ICRF). Corrections are
performed for proper motions and parallax.

Planet ephemeris data from Jet Propulsion Laboratory using the DE405 database. DE405
is JPL's latest planetary ephemeris with correction for both nutations and librations.
DE405 uses the J2000 International Celestial Reference Frame (ICRF). The portion
of this database provided with Pocket Stars covers the years CE 2000 to CE 2020.
Other ephemeris date ranges are available for download here.

Other Features

Rise, set, and meridian times for all solar system bodies

Lunar Phase calendar and animation showing the relative positions of the earth,
moon, and sun.

Position from intercept and azimuth by calculation for multiple sextant observations
following procedures in "The Nautical Almanac" by the United States Naval Observatory.
Any number of sextant observations can be individually enabled to compute a best
fit when computing a FIX. Results may be plotted, showing the assumed position (AP),
FIX, and observations with intercepts and amplitudes.